Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son fromApril 1, 1936 to March 31, 1937. Item contains logs for 172 batches of standard Ale, Sparkling Ale, and Stout.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 1, 1936 to March 31, 1937. Item contains logs for 101 batches of standard Ale and Stag Head.
Item consists of brewing logs for Alexander Keith and Son Ltd from April 1, 1941 to March 31, 1942. Item contains logs for 219 batches of Ale, Stag's Head, and Lager.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 1, 1943 to March 31, 1944. Item contains logs for 183 batches of standard Ale, Stag's Head, and Lager.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 2, 1940 to March 31, 19417. Item contains logs for 199 batches of standard Ale, Stag Head, and Lager.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 3, 1934 to March 28, 1935. Item contains logs for 142 batches of standard Ale, Sparkling Ale, and Stout.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 4, 1932 to March 29, 1933. Item contains logs for 180 batches of Ale, Stout, and Sparkling Ale.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 4, 1933 to April 3, 1934. Item contains logs for 145 batches of standard Ale, Sparkling Ale, and Stout.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 4, 1935 to March 31, 1936. Item contains logs for 157 batches of standard Ale, Sparkling Ale, Stout, and Old Scotia.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 4, 1939 to March 28, 1940. Item contains logs for 131 batches of standard Ale, Stag Head, and Lager.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 5, 1938 to March 29, 1939. Item contains logs for 105 batches of standard Ale, Stag Head, and several Lager variants.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from April 6, 1937 to March 31, 1938. Item contains logs for 116 batches of standard Ale, Stag Head, and Lager.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from February 22, 1940 to March 29, 1940. Item contains logs for 26 batches (numbered 197-222; a follow-up of the previous year's brew book) of standard Ale, Stout, and Old Scotia.
Item consists of brewing logs for A. Keith and Son from October 19, 1931 to March 31, 1932. Item contains logs for 87 batches of standard Ale, Sparkling Ale, and Stout.
File contains a newspaper clipping and letters to Edith J. Archibald concerning her song "Britain Calls," which was written for the Royal Canadian Regiment during World War One. The newspaper clipping includes the text, but not the music, of the song. The letters are from G.A. LeCain, Lieutenant-Colonel of the Commanding 25th Battalion; George Murray, Provincial Secretary; and Evelyn Starr, professional violinist of New York City. An inscription by Edith J. Archibald at the top of the letters reads, "This song, dedicated to the Royal Canadian Regt. has made their 'marchpost' and I am told by an officer of that Regt. that is was played and sung daily during the war. He himself said it had keeped [sic] the men when on the tramp, 'over many a weary mile.'"
File contains set designs for Neptune Theatre's production of "Broadway Bound," directed by David Brown and designed by Stephen Osler. The file includes some of Osler's original transparencies and annotated copies of the plans.
File contains a brochure on the history of the Dalhousie University No. 7 Stationary Hospital. The brochure includes a brief history of the hospital and a nominal role of staff that worked with the hospital. The brochure also includes transcriptions of letters and lists of staff transferred in and out of the hospital.
Item is a sheet with two drawings of the second floor of a building designed to serve as office and lecture spaces before being converted to a law library and eventually a university museum. One plan shows the space partitioned into a lecture hall, faculty room and offices to serve current needs; in the second it is laid out as a law library. There is also a small inset aerial perspective of the new (temporary) Arts Building in relation to the Science Building and Macdonald Library.
Item consists of the text of a speech delivered by Howard Clark on March 18, 1991, titled "Business Schools and the Future of Nova Scotia's Universities".
File contains set designs for the Neptune Theatre production of "Butterflies are Free," directed by A. McKim with designs by Robert Doyle. The file includes Doyle's original pencil drawings as well as annotated copies.
File contains draft and amended copies of the International Centre for Ocean Development (ICOD) By-Laws entitled "By-Law (Articles) of the corporation named the International Centre for Ocean Development/Centre International de Developpement des Oceans."
File includes correspondence with Fisheries and Oceans, Pacific and Freshwater Fisheries Canada, Supply and Services Canada, and Dalhousie University. Correspondents include Roy Cheeseman; Aldo Chircop; Garry Comber (Secretary-Treasurer of ICOD); David Copp; Jeanne-Mance Cote (administrative assistant to the President of ICOD); Heather Creech; Luc Cuyvers; Mary Jo Duncan. File includes a copy of International Ocean Institute (IOI) statutes and lists IOI Board of Trustees. File contains one piece of personal correspondence.
File contains correspondence. Correspondents include Dr. T. Eitel, Member of Parliament Charles Caccia (includes a press release from his office), Richard C. Caruana (on ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea), The Right Honourable Joe Clark (Secretary of State for External Affairs), Harlan Cleveland (on the boat paper, and the reasons it must be resisted), law professor Thomas A. Clingan, Professor Umberto Columbo, Guido De Marco (Maltese Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs), Indonesian Ambassador Hasjim Djalal (on the non-paper, and the need to establish a sea-bed mining authority immediately), and Akiko Domoto. Also includes a draft paper by the Group of 77 ("Agreement on the Establishment of an Interim Regime from the Coming into Force of the Convention to the Time when Commerical Seabed Mining Becomes Economically and Ecologically Feasible").